G. Reza Najem
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey
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Preventive Medicine | 1985
G. Reza Najem; Teresa W. Greer
Age-adjusted female reproductive organs and breast cancer mortality rates (all sites combined) were higher in 19 of 21 New Jersey counties than the U.S. national rates. Compared with national trends, New Jersey cervical cancer and corpus uteri rates have declined less than the national rate among all races. Ovarian and breast cancer rates have not changed over the years, a pattern similar to that of the nation. New Jersey cancer mortality rates during the period 1968-1977 that highly significantly (P less than 0.0005) exceeded national rates were cancers of the cervix in 2 counties among whites and in one county among nonwhites; of the corpus uteri and uterus not specified in 3 counties among whites; of the ovaries in 3 counties among whites; and of the breast in 10 counties among whites. The overall New Jersey cancer mortality significantly (P less than 0.0005) exceeded national rates for ovarian cancer among whites and nonwhites and for breast cancer among whites. Statistically significant and positive correlations were found between breast cancer mortality and chemical toxic waste disposal sites, annual per capita income, urbanization index, and population density among whites in 21 New Jersey counties. Ovarian cancer mortality was also significantly and positively correlated with annual per capita income, and negatively with birth defects. Cervical cancer mortality showed a significant negative correlation with annual per capita income and a significant positive correlation with birth defects and low birth weight among nonwhites in 21 New Jersey counties.
Preventive Medicine | 1982
G. Reza Najem; Benjamin F. Rush; Fred W. Miller; Paul E. Dimarco; Susan E. Roellke; Naomi Grobstein; Joel W. Levitt
Abstract It has been postulated that breast cancer is not a single disease, and that the risk factors occurring in premenopausal women are different from those occurring in postmenopausal women. This case-control study of pre- and postmenopausal breast cancer was designed to investigate a variety of variables including age of menarche, parity, age at first full-term birth, breast feeding patterns, age at menopause, and history of oral contraceptive use. The study compared 60 breast cancer cases and 125 matched controls from the same breast cancer screening population. Cases and controls were matched for race, age, place of birth, marital status, education, and annual family income. More cases than controls used oral contraceptives; the differences were statistically significant. The risk ratio estimates were 2.9 (confidence intervals 1.19-7.15). The mean duration of oral contraceptive use was more than two times longer among premenopausal breast cancer cases than controls and five times longer among postmenopausal cases than the controls. The breast cancer cases had significantly more relatives with a history of other cancers than the control group (risk ratio estimate 2.3, P
Preventive Medicine | 1983
G. Reza Najem; Kevin H. Molteni
The state of New Jersey (N.J.) has been thought to have an unusually high overall cancer mortality rate; this assumption has been based on national 1950–1969 mortality data for N.J. counties. This study presents an analysis of more recent rates of respiratory cancer mortality in 21 N.J. counties during 1968–1977, a comparison with the 1950–1969 rates, and associations between current respiratory cancer mortality rates and selected demographic and environmental variables. Age-adjusted mortality rates for cancer of respiratory organs were calculated for the N.J. counties during the period 1968–1977 and compared with the period 1950–1969, with the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) survey, and with cancer mortality in the United States, 1973–1977. The county rates were also correlated with chemical toxic-waste disposal sites (CTWDS), annual per capita income, percentage of the population employed in chemical industries, the density of population, and the urbanization index of each of 21 N.J. counties. The lung, bronchus, trachea, and pleura cancer mortality rates among white and nonwhite males and females in N.J. were substantially higher than the national rates during the period 1950–1969. In more recent years, the increases in U.S. mortality rates for lung, bronchus, trachea, and pleura cancers were significantly greater (P < 0.01) than those found in most of the 21 N.J. counties. As a consequence, the national rates are now more comparable to N.J. rates. Although the gaps between N.J. and the United States in these rates have narrowed, the observed number of laryngeal and lung cancer deaths remained significantly higher (P < 0.01 to P < 0.0001) than expected cancer deaths, based on U.S. rates, among one or more subgroup populations (white and nonwhite males and females) in several N.J. counties. Among white men in Middlesex, Camden, Burlington, and Ocean counties, the observed number of deaths for lung cancer was found to be significantly (P < 0.0001) greater than the expected number of deaths. In Hudson county observed deaths from both laryngeal and lung cancer among white men were significantly greater than the expected number of deaths from these cancers (P < 0.0001). Statistically significant and positive correlations were found between laryngeal cancer mortality and CTWDS, urbanization index, and population density. Lung cancer mortality also correlated significantly with CTWDS in N.J. Both larynx and lung cancer mortality showed significant and consistent negative correlations with annual per capita-income in N.J. Some of the implications of the study findings are discussed and recommendations made for future investigations.
International Journal of Epidemiology | 1982
G. Reza Najem; Donald B. Louria; Joseph J. Seebode; Inderjit S. Thind; Janice M. Prusakowski; Robert B. Ambrose; Anthony R. Fernicola
Journal of Adolescent Health | 1997
G. Reza Najem; Fatima Batuman; Ann Marie Smith; Martin Feuerman
JAMA | 1981
G. Reza Najem; Donald B. Louria; Inderjit S. Thind; Marvin A. Lavenhar; David J. Gocke; Stuart E. Baskin; Ann Marie Miller; Howard J. Frankel; Joel Notkin; Martin G. acobs; Barry Weiner
International Journal of Epidemiology | 1985
G. Reza Najem; Donald B. Louria; Marvin A. Lavenhar; Martin Feuerman
International Journal of Epidemiology | 1983
G. Reza Najem; Inderjit S. Thind; Marvin A. Lavenhar; Donald B. Louria
American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 1996
G. Reza Najem; Fatima Batuman; Ann Marie Smith
International Journal of Epidemiology | 1990
G. Reza Najem; Duncan E Hutcheon; Martin Feuerman